"Thank you, New York! I love you!" Trump tweeted after the polls closed.
The delegate pick-up moves Trump closer to the number needed
to lock the nomination and keep the #NotTrump forces from wresting it
away from him at the convention. Republican National Committee Chairman
Reince Priebus promised Tuesday the process would be fair even as he
vowed that the nomination contest would head to a second ballot if Trump
failed to secure the 1,237 delegates needed before the GOP convention
in Cleveland, July 18-21.
Trump also faces internal hurdles to winning the nomination. As Trump
pulled further ahead of Texas Sen. Ted Cruz and Ohio Gov. John Kasich,
his campaign continued to fend off questions about its organizational
abilities and professionalism after mistakes errors such as a spelling
error cost it delegates in key states, including Colorado. Longtime aide
Stuart Jolly left the campaign Monday after serving as its national
field director, The Guardian reported.Some GOP leaders fear Trump won't be well positioned to take on Democratic front-runner Hillary Clinton and her tightly run campaign, while Cruz reminded voters Tuesday during a media interview that Trump hasn't had a strong handle on the primary process that requires campaign to acquire delegate voters, not just win states.
"I cannot help that the Donald Trump campaign does not seem capable of running a lemonade stand," Cruz said in a radio interview with Sean Hannity, adding, "The Donald Trump campaign doesn't know what they're doing. They don't show up."
Ahead of New York, Trump won 21 states to become the Republican front-runner, but his candidacy was challenged by GOP leaders, including Mitt Romney, who sought to persuade voters that his penchant for jabs and divisive policy ideas, such as banning Muslims who aren’t U.S. citizens and building a wall on the Mexican border, are not presidential and he shouldn’t become the nominee. He is expected to do well April 26 in primary contests in Maryland, Delaware, Rhode Island, Connecticut and Pennsylvania.
Trump made his case in New York by touting his close ties to the state where he grew up and built his business empire. He spent no money on ad buys, instead relying on the massive media attention that has followed his campaign and on his name recognition as a former reality TV star and one of the nation's richest men. He was ahead by 30 points in the polls long before a vote was cast.
But his efforts weren't without missteps. He was mocked on social media Tuesday after he misspoke about the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks during a rally in Buffalo, New York.
"I wrote this out, and it's very close to my heart because I was down there and I watched our police and our firemen down at 7/11, down at the World Trade Center right after it came down," the GOP frontrunner said. "And I saw the greatest people I've ever seen in action."
“We see the values with our New York police and firefighters. They don’t get enough credit. These are great, great people,” he said. “We see it with the families that go to your parks. Central Park, all of your parks,” he said.
“And what are New York values? Honesty and straight talk,” Trump said. “People say, ‘Oh you tell it too straight, Mr. Trump.’ I think that’s what you like.”
Many Trump supporters agree. They say he is best positioned to grow the economy and combat illegal immigration.Rich Padovano told the New York Times after voting in Staten Island that the nation need’s Trump’s outspokenness.
“I agree with the majority of Republicans,” said Padovano, 62, a retired restaurant manager and a lifelong Republican. “We are lost as a country, and we need somebody to make drastic changes.”
“And we are allowing in too many people in the country too quickly,” he said of undocumented immigrants.
While two of his adult children failed to register on time to vote for him Tuesday, there was one vote Trump could count on in New York. His own. He cast his ballot Tuesday morning at a midtown Manhattan polling place.
Post a Comment